MAGNETIC MIRACLE

Inventor's design consumes no fuel, emits no fumes

By Bud Kenny

Free Press, Little Rock, AR

April 14-27, 1994

Devices that have truly improved the human condition - such as electricity,
the telephone and the airplane - were created by people who passionately believe
their inventions would make the world a better place to live. Troy Reed of
Tulsa, Oklahoma is such a person.

Reed has invented and patented a motor that consumes no fuel and emits no
fumes. It is powerful enough to turn a 7,000-watt generator, which is enough
electricity to run an average home. Production of the Reed Magnetic Motor for
use by the general public may begin by year's end.

Reed, 57, has also invented an automobile called "Surge" that
employs his new technology. Unlike a battery-powered car, Reed's Surge does not
have to be plugged in to be recharged. The car recharges itself as it rolls down
the highway at speeds of up to 85 miles an hour. Reed and actor Dennis Weaver, a
cousin and inventor in the project, plan to make the first highway test-run of
the car this summer.

Reed said he has been contacted about coverage of the test run by, among
others, 20/20, 60 Minutes, Larry King Live, Primetime Live and CNN. A
representative of CNN, Reed said, has already seen the car and might broadcast
daily updates during the journey.

The idea for this technology came to Reed in a number of dreams and visions
over the past 35 years. He said he got the first in 1959 while employed as a
machinist making 70 cents an hour. Thirty years later, in 1989, he put those
dreams to the test, turning a hand crank that put the first Reed Magnetic Motor
in motion. That prototype was seven feet tall, weighed more than 500 pounds, had
four moving parts and powered a 500-watt generator. His latest motor takes two
car batteries to start (they are re-charged by the generator), is 20 inches
high, weighs less than 200 pounds, has one moving part and runs a 7000-watt
generator.

If Reed's motor works as well as he says it does, it would be a rather
amazing technological breakthrough. After all, it would mean a person could live
anywhere one wanted with all the comforts and never have to pay an electric
bill. One would also be able to drive to work, or anywhere else, without
consuming fuel. And best of all, one could do these things without polluting the
environment.

Although most people have never heard of the Reed Magnetic Motor, it is well
known in the science world. Since 1989 Reed and his motor have been featured at
numerous international scientific conferences - the most recent on in Denver in
March. Reed also has been written up in scientific journals and is included in
the latest edition of Monuments of Mars, a book of inventors written by former
NASA science writer Richard Hoagland.

If Reed has his way, his motor soon will no longer be a scientific
curiosity. Currently he is in the final stages of granting a license to produce
the motor to an American company and a company in India. Reed would not give the
names of the companies because he said he is still "negotiating."

"I've been approached by lots of companies from all over the world,"
Reed said. "I wanted the company that builds this motor to be doing it for
the same reason I developed it - to help mother earth."

Reed did say that the companies granted licenses would start producing the
motors for the consumer almost immediately. "The technology is already
there, it is just a matter of putting all together the right way to make it
work," Reed said.

The 1989 prototype uses a horizontal shaft with several magnets on it. Above
the shaft are four vertical spring-loaded pistons with a magnet on the end
closest to the shaft. Turning the hand crank spins the horizontal shaft and the
magnetic spring-loaded pistons move up and down to trigger the motion of the
shaft and the magnetic force field. Once the shaft is put into motion, it
continues to spin until a brake is applied.

Instead of moveable pistons, the latest model of the motor uses and
electronic system and stationary magnets to start and control the motion of the
shaft. Consequently, the only moving part in the motor is the horizontal shaft.
In the current model, the shaft turns in bearings, but Reed said the
mass-produced model will not have the bearings. Instead, the shaft will be
magnetically suspended inside the motor casing. Suspending the shaft means there
will be nothing to wear out, or make noise, Reed said.

Reed is aware inventions such as his often end up being shelved away from
the consumer by a large oil company. So Reed said he has proceeded with caution.
"Just like the companies that are going to produce these motors, I made
sure that my investors were motivated for the right reasons," Reed said. "If
they are only in it for the money, then I turned them away. On the other hand,
if they share my desire to see this technology in the marketplace to help save
the environment, then we made a deal."

Reed said he also has been careful in how he financed the development of his
motor. He said he talked with other would-be world-saving inventors who were
put out of business by the government for violating interstate security exchange
laws. "They needed capital to develop their ideas, so they sold their
investors stock," Reed said. "It always takes longer to develop
something like this than you think it will. So when it came time to make good on
that stock, they couldn't do it."

When Reed needed capital, instead of issuing stock he gave his investors
promissory notes that were contingent on his invention eventually making it to
market. Once the motors are available to the public, Reed said he will offer his
investors the option of "holding the promissory notes or exchanging them
for stock."

However, the federal government is aware of what is going on at Reed
Technologies. In fact, Reed said NASA has volunteered to test the motor.

Reed estimated it will cost about $3,500 per motor to mass produce his
invention.

Bud Kenny of Hot Springs is scheduled to begin a 15-year world-walking tour
on June 5 (see related story page 23). Kenny will live in a small house on
wheels, which will be pulled by two mules. Electricity for the house will be
provided by alternative electrical generating systems such as solar panels and a
pedal generator that will store power from the rotation of Dylan's wheels.
Kenny's first stop on his world tour will be around the first of August in
Tulsa, where Reed will help Kenny develop the electrical system for the home.